Tokenized Deposits Taking Hold

Crypto is changing the world of finance but not in the way many long time proponents thought. We are seeing Wall Street taking over in many ways, with investment banks already starting to dominate.

Firms such as Blackrock are major crypto players. JPMorgan is in the game, with its own blockchain already operating. It is only a matter of time before all major investment banks offer some type of funds.

Then we have the commercial banks. Stablecoins are going to be the vehicle here. This is going to be an interest race since, in my view, it is something that all will participate in.

Simply put, the legacy banking system is outdated. It is too slow, expensive, and fails to serve in an updated manner. Crypto changes this.

In this article I will discuss how tokenized deposits will take over in 2026.


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Tokenized Deposits Taking Hold

Faster and cheaper.

That is all one needs to know about this discussion. When something is tokenized, the movement, especially cross-border, is faster and cheaper. The banking system (and associated entities) make billions each year moving money around.

One challenge is that institutions want to cut costs whenever possible. While banks are extractors, they often do that to each other. The vultures have no preference of who they are sticking it to.

Crypto altered this by having the ability to transfer value on blockchain. Since that is a more technical advanced system in the sense that it can offer faster and cheaper transactions, the banks are interested.

Stablecoins are emerging as the go to. With regulation becoming clearer, we are seeing a massive shift in the banks' perspective. No longer are they fighting it.

HSBC Leading The Charge

We have the first (as far as I know) announcement of a major global bank entering the tokenized deposit game in a major way.

HSBC announced that it will be offering tokenized deposits to some customers in the first half of 2026. This will be for clients in the US and UAE.

Global megabank HSBC is doubling down on tokenization over stablecoins as global banks rush to keep pace in the stablecoin race.

HSBC Holdings will start offering tokenized deposits to its corporate clients in the US and the United Arab Emirates in the first half of 2026, according to a Bloomberg report on Tuesday.

The reason is simple as explained above.

The Tokenized Deposit Service (TDS) by HSBC enables clients to send money domestically and abroad in seconds around the clock, said Manish Kohli, HSBC’s global head of payments solutions.

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Financial institutions are realizing the benefit to their operations. HSBC is starting with corporate clients since they tend to move larger sums of money around the world. Individuals do a lot less cross-border payments. Hence, the dollar volume is within the corporate world.

My guess is we will see the competitive landscape heat up. HSBC might get the early jump but others will follow.

The net effect is deflationary pressures. Companies will see costs drop as they are able to send money for a fraction of what it commonly costs. With networks such as Solana offering transactions for a few cents, this will hold massive appeal to larger companies.

Yield

There is great debate happening over the ability to offer yield.

The banks are fighting companies such as Circle and Tether who have the ability to offer yield on their stablecoins. At the core is the fact these assets are backed by, commonly, US Treasuries. Those pay a return, which the companies can pass on to the stablecoin holders.

At the same time, networks also have ways of generating a return via liquidity pools (and other forms of staking). This can be enhanced by other forms of tokenization, offering another revenue stream.

Banks historically have paid a very low return on deposits. With competition, they are likely to not withstand the onslaught. So far, the banks are using regulatory capture to protect their business.

This only adds another layer to the equation. Banks could increase the yield offered via smart contracts and get away from the measly rates they presently offer. Of course, they will want to keep the difference but, hopefully, competition steps in to prevent this.

Either way, 2026 will be the year for tokenized deposits.

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This post has been shared on Reddit by @flummi97 through the HivePosh initiative.

bye bye banks tired of bailing you all out